The question Is there any difference between this two versions? was recently closed as "primarily opinion-based". The question draws from Exercise 12.21 of C++ Primer 5th edition, which states:
We could have written StrBlobPtr’s deref member as
follows:
std::string& deref() const
{ return (*check(curr, "dereference past end"))[curr]; }
Which version do you think is better and why?
At face-value, the exercise is asking about the stylistic differences between two code samples (which is provided earlier in the section). If so, the exercise is a useless one. This seems highly suspect, as one user pointed out,
Two people chose to close this as "primarily opinion-based". But I doubt that a C++ text book would ask an opinion-based question as an exercise, would it?
There are several problems at play here. The ability for others to answer the question is severely limited because it requires one to:
- have access to the book,
- consume and comprehend a wealth of knowledge (aka, read through potentially several chapters or the whole book leading up to the exercise),
- magically be able to read the author's mind
This puts the burden on the question asker to provide more context in the question so it can be become answerable. This is difficult because the question asker may not know what is important to provide, nor understand the relationship between the exercise and the information contained in the preceding chapters. This leads to the perception that the exercise is a useless one.
One user, who does have access to the book, seems to suggest that there isn't anything else to it. I find this hard to believe, but without owning the book, I cannot continue the discussion any further. This is unfortunate because the question as it stands requires remarkable insight to answer, which is easier for someone who owns the book.
The problem is, if the question is closed, nobody can come along and answer it. And it would take major convincing to have someone who does have the book (or for the OP to have a flash of insight) to edit the question for re-opening.
I would like to see the question re-opened sometime in the future, but should the issue just be dropped?
For a question with a similar (but not the same) issue, see C++11 type deduction vs const char *. The OP asks an article where the author suggests that there is a subtle difference between two pieces of code, when most of the users in the thread agree that there is no difference.
p
needs to be allocated a block of memory and then deallocated, as opposed to being stored in a register temporarily. If that's the case, then the question is not opinion-based. It would appear as such.